The 11 JS-SEZ Priority Sectors and Their Incentives

June 27, 2026

By: Commercial Johor Editorial

The JS-SEZ priority sectors determine which businesses can access the 5% corporate tax rate and other incentives — and not every Singapore company moving to JB will qualify under the current designations. MIDA JS-SEZ priority sector list.

Overview: The 11 JS-SEZ Priority Sectors

The JS-SEZ does not extend its 5% corporate tax to all businesses — only to companies operating in one of 11 designated priority sectors. Understanding exactly where your business falls within these sectors is the first step before any JS-SEZ application. This article profiles all 11 sectors, explains what activities qualify within each, and flags the ones most relevant to Singapore companies.

Quick Facts

  • Number of designated priority sectors: 11
  • Approving authority: MIDA (manufacturing/industrial) or IMFC-J (services/digital/financial)
  • Key incentive for qualifying companies: 5% corporate tax; 15% knowledge worker income tax
  • Sector list source: JS-SEZ Framework Agreement, January 2024 — supplemented by MIDA sector guidelines

Key takeaway: Digital economy and financial services are the two sectors with the broadest interpretation — covering most Singapore professional, tech, and fintech companies. When in doubt, digital economy is usually your route in.

The 11 Priority Sectors in Full

#SectorKey Qualifying ActivitiesMost Relevant To
1Electrical & Electronics (E&E)Semiconductor manufacturing, PCB assembly, electronic components, consumer electronics productionSG manufacturers relocating production
2Chemical & PetrochemicalSpecialty chemicals, industrial gases, petrochemical processing, polymer manufacturingChemical manufacturers, Pengerang-adjacent operations
3Machinery & EquipmentIndustrial machinery, precision engineering, automation equipment manufacturingEngineering firms, tooling manufacturers
4AerospaceMRO (maintenance, repair, overhaul), aircraft component manufacturing, avionicsAerospace suppliers — Senai corridor
5Logistics & Supply Chain3PL operations, freight forwarding, cold chain logistics, last-mile distributionSG logistics companies needing Malaysia base
6Digital EconomySoftware development, data analytics, AI/ML, fintech platforms, e-commerce operations, cloud services, cybersecurityMost SG tech and professional services companies
7Financial ServicesFund management, investment advisory, insurance, banking operations (non-retail), trade financeSG financial firms, family offices (Forest City SFZ)
8EducationPrivate higher education, vocational training, corporate training centres, EdTechEducation providers, training companies
9HealthcarePrivate hospitals, specialist clinics, medical device manufacturing, pharma R&DHealthcare operators, medical device cos
10Tourism & HospitalityIntegrated resort development, MICE facilities, theme park operations, hospitality managementTourism and hospitality operators
11Creative IndustriesFilm and TV production, animation, game development, content creation platformsMedia and content companies

Sectors Most Relevant to Singapore Companies

Digital Economy (Sector 6) is the broadest and most commonly used pathway for Singapore companies. MIDA and IMFC-J interpret “digital economy” generously — it covers software-as-a-service companies, data analytics firms, cybersecurity providers, fintech platforms, AI companies, and most professional services companies with a technology component. If your Singapore business has any meaningful technology enablement, digital economy is almost certainly your qualifying sector.

Financial Services (Sector 7) covers the majority of Singapore’s financial sector: fund management, wealth management, investment banking operations, insurance back-office, and trade finance. The Forest City Special Financial Zone is specifically designed for financial services companies wanting the most aggressive incentives (0% for family offices). Standard financial services companies outside Forest City access the 5% JS-SEZ rate through IMFC-J.

Logistics & Supply Chain (Sector 5) is increasingly relevant as Singapore logistics companies face JTC lease renewals at escalating rates. Johor’s logistics infrastructure — PTP, Pasir Gudang, and the expanding Senai airport cargo hub — makes this a natural fit. MIDA handles manufacturing-adjacent logistics; IMFC-J handles pure logistics services.

What Doesn’t Qualify

Several common business types do not qualify for JS-SEZ incentives because they fall outside the 11 sectors or fail the physical presence requirement:

  • Retail trade (physical retail, F&B restaurants) — not in the 11 sectors
  • Real estate development (pure property development for sale) — not a qualifying activity
  • Professional services without technology component (traditional law firms, accounting practices) — falls outside unless structured as digital economy
  • Import/export trading without a qualifying manufacturing or logistics service component
  • Holding companies with no operational qualifying activity

Who This Is For

  • Singapore companies doing initial eligibility assessment before committing to a MIDA/IMFC-J application
  • Business owners uncertain which sector category their activity falls under
  • Corporate advisers helping clients structure their Malaysian entity’s principal activity description

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a company qualify under multiple sectors?

An application is made for a primary qualifying activity under one sector. If your business genuinely spans multiple qualifying sectors (e.g. a medtech company combining healthcare and digital economy activities), you should discuss this with MIDA before applying — they will designate the primary qualifying sector and the approved activity description. Having multiple qualifying income streams is fine, as long as they are properly documented and the primary application is clear.

How strictly does MIDA define “digital economy”?

Broadly enough that most tech-enabled businesses qualify, but not so broadly that pure trading or consulting with no technology component qualifies. MIDA’s published definition includes: ICT services, digital content, e-commerce, data centres, AI, IoT, cybersecurity, and platform businesses. Professional services firms with a demonstrable technology platform or digital service delivery model are generally accepted.

References

  1. Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA). JS-SEZ Priority Sector Guidelines 2024. mida.gov.my
  2. IMFC-J Secretariat. Services Sector Qualifying Activities List 2024. imfcj.gov.my
  3. MDEC (Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation). Digital Economy Activities Classification 2024. mdec.my
  4. Invest Johor. JS-SEZ Sector Profiles for Investors 2025. investjohor.gov.my